Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My nephew only did karate after school and some kind of music ensemble (bass) during class in high school, and is at UMD on a full engineering scholarship.
That’s a mediocre kid
Ok i just presented facts. Better to be a happy, unstressed medicore kid than an unhappy stressed out medicre kid though
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sister has three older kids. They were not intense about activities (kids did whatever gymnastics, dance, sports classes they wanted after school in elementary school, but my sister and her husband work so each kid did 1-2 things of their choice and they coordinated carpools or did activities on weekends.) as the kids entered middle and high school, they were on athletic teams and academic extracurriculars at their private school.
My oldest niece is a freshman at a top tier college (working hard pre-med), middle sibling is among top of their class in eleventh grade, and youngest is in middle school. They’re well adjusted, kind and hard working kids.
confused by this post. you describe heavily scheduled kids, but you are saying they weren't heavily scheduled? these are not examples of under scheduled children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My nephew only did karate after school and some kind of music ensemble (bass) during class in high school, and is at UMD on a full engineering scholarship.
That’s a mediocre kid
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My nephew only did karate after school and some kind of music ensemble (bass) during class in high school, and is at UMD on a full engineering scholarship.
That’s a mediocre kid
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a kid who had no formal EC's and goes to NYU.
His activities were focusing on academics. Sometimes that’s all you need.
Anonymous wrote:15:15 again OOS flagships. Never considered sports as significant for college admission - not why it's done. Would not have wanted kids to choose their college based on sports or devote time to a sport in college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A and B student doing well. Plays only rugby in high school. He is going to community college first.
Nobody is stressing or stressed.
Is rugby a thing in some high schools? Sounds fun.
Most of us want our kids to not go to community college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A and B student doing well. Plays only rugby in high school. He is going to community college first.
Nobody is stressing or stressed.
Is rugby a thing in some high schools? Sounds fun.
Anonymous wrote:A and B student doing well. Plays only rugby in high school. He is going to community college first.
Nobody is stressing or stressed.
Anonymous wrote:I know a kid who had no formal EC's and goes to NYU.
Anonymous wrote:I know a kid who had no formal EC's and goes to NYU.
But I did excellent in school, had a job in HS, and did some volunteering in HS including overseas. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are an average adult who went to an average college, have an average job and your kids attend an average school, your kid is probably doing fine and will continue your average lives. They can also go to an average college, get an average job, marry a fellow average spouse and repeat. This is probably what happens to most people.
This, pretty much. I also find it odd that we as a society drive kids to do, do, do, all this stuff. But we don't do it as adults. Even before becoming consumed with taking our kids to all this stuff, your typical adult goes to work, hangs out with friends, maybe fits in time to go to the gym and keep up a hobby. So by looking at the adults, our kids learn that doing all this stuff is just about the college resume but is to be dropped as soon as possible. Instead, better to do less, encourage exploration, and finding real interests that you can pursue for the rest of your life.